
After My Husband Cheated, I Embraced Revenge
Chapter 2
"What was that?"
Ethan's voice cut through the darkness above me, sharp with sudden alertness. The bed shifted as weight moved toward the edge. I pressed myself into the farthest corner under the bed frame, my spine against the cold wall, every muscle locked in terror.
A hand appeared over the side of the mattress. Fingers reaching down, searching.
My phone lay there on the hardwood, screen still glowing with the recording app's timer. Forty-two minutes, seventeen seconds. Every second of my humiliation captured in digital clarity.
The fingers stretched closer. Six inches away. Four.
Then his cell phone erupted on the nightstand, the ringtone obscenely loud in the charged silence.
Ethan swore viciously and pulled back. Through the gap between mattress and floor, I watched his feet move away from the bed's edge. "Shaw. This better be—"
"Hunter." Even through the phone speaker, Dylan Shaw's voice carried the razor edge of absolute authority. "We have a critical server failure. The entire West Coast data center is down. I need you at the office in twenty minutes."
"Dylan, I can't just—"
"I don't care if you're bleeding out on an operating table. This is costing us $200,000 per minute. Move."
The call ended with a decisive click.
"Fuck!" Ethan scrambled off the bed. Clothes rustled as both men dressed with frantic speed. "I have to go. This could take all night."
"Seriously?" Ryan's voice held petulant disappointment. "We finally had the house to ourselves."
"You heard him. Shaw doesn't make idle threats." Belt buckle clicking. Shoes sliding on. "I'll call you tomorrow."
Footsteps pounded down the stairs. The front door slammed. Car engine roaring to life in the driveway, tires squealing as Ethan peeled out.
I didn't move.
Couldn't move.
The recording app still ran, capturing only my ragged breathing now. Ten minutes passed. Fifteen. Twenty. My legs cramped, lace digging into skin, but I remained frozen under the bed like a trapped animal.
Finally, moving with mechanical precision, I crawled out.
The bedroom looked ordinary. Mocking in its normalcy. Our wedding photo still smiled from the dresser—two people I no longer recognized. I retrieved my phone with numb fingers, stopping the recording at fifty-three minutes.
Evidence.
I opened three separate cloud storage apps, uploading the file to each with different encryption keys. Only after the third backup completed did I allow myself to look at the bed. Sheets twisted where they'd been. A water bottle on Ryan's side—expensive brand, the kind sold at boutique gyms.
My hands steadied as I photographed everything. Wide shots. Close-ups. A receipt that had fallen from Ethan's pocket during his hasty exit, timestamped from this afternoon at Ryan's gym. Each image uploaded to join the audio file.
The black lace felt like a costume now, ridiculous and obscene. I stripped it off and dropped it in the bathroom trash, watching expensive fabric crumple among used tissues and cotton swabs. In the shower, scalding water couldn't wash away what I'd witnessed. What I'd heard.
*She's practically a machine.*
I dressed in yoga pants and an old Stanford hoodie, then walked to my home office. The leather chair creaked as I sat down, plugging in my laptop. 2:47 AM glowed on the screen.
I opened the audio file.
Listened.
The first playthrough, I cried. Silent tears tracking down my face as my husband's voice described me as cold, calculating, everything Ryan supposedly wasn't.
The second time, I took notes. Timestamps. Specific phrases. Legal implications.
By the third listen, something had crystallized inside me. The devastated wife receded. The CEO emerged.
I opened new browser tabs, fingers flying across the keyboard. Dylan Shaw's company—QuantumEdge Technologies. Recent SEC filings showed aggressive expansion but cash flow problems. Two failed acquisition attempts in the past year. Overextended.
Their stock had dropped 15% last quarter.
My company's cloud infrastructure could solve their scaling problems. Their AI patents could accelerate our development timeline by eighteen months. A merger made strategic sense—had always made sense, except for our rivalry.
Except Dylan Shaw hated losing almost as much as I did.
Almost.
I pulled up spreadsheets, running merger scenarios. Combined market cap. Synergy projections. Cost savings from eliminating redundant positions—including certain operations managers who couldn't keep their personal lives from exploding spectacularly.
Dawn crept through the windows, painting everything gold and pink. Beautiful. Deceptive.
At exactly 6:00 AM, I pulled up Dylan Shaw's private cell number. I'd obtained it two years ago through James Reynolds, the board member we shared, but never had reason to use it.
Until now.
My finger hovered over the call button. This would change everything. Cross a line that couldn't be uncrossed. Merge personal devastation with professional warfare in ways that would make headlines.
*She's practically a machine.*
I pressed call.
Three rings. Four. Then a voice rough with exhaustion: "Shaw."
"Mr. Shaw, this is Victoria Sterling." My voice emerged steady, controlled. The CEO voice that had intimidated countless boardrooms. "I apologize for calling so early, but I believe we have mutual interests regarding your employee Ethan Hunter."
Silence stretched on the other end. I could almost hear his mind working, calculating angles.
"I'm listening," he finally said, wariness laced through curiosity.
"I have information that could benefit us both professionally. Significantly." I paused, letting the weight settle. "And I'd like to discuss a potential business arrangement that could reshape both our companies. When can we meet privately?"
Another pause. Longer this time.
"My office. Nine AM. Come alone."
The line went dead.
I set down my phone and looked out at the sunrise painting Silicon Valley in shades of blood and gold. Somewhere out there, Ethan was still scrambling to fix Dylan's servers, oblivious to the storm gathering around him.
Somewhere out there, my marriage was already dead.
But my revenge?
That was just beginning.
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